Anyone in their early-fifties and younger would be caught by this
proposal – plunging more into poverty in later life. Only the top
10% of the UK population stay healthy to their early 70s. Cutting
costs by making unwell workers wait longer, favours the
well-pensioned higher paid. The State Pension is part of every
worker’s social contract Private pension coverage is still too
uneven to support increasing State Pension Age just because
‘average’ life...Request free trial
- Anyone in their early-fifties and younger would be caught by
this proposal – plunging more into poverty in later life.
- Only the top 10% of the UK population stay healthy to their
early 70s.
- Cutting costs by making unwell workers wait longer, favours
the well-pensioned higher paid.
- The State Pension is part of every worker’s social contract
- Private pension coverage is still too uneven to support
increasing State Pension Age just because ‘average’ life
expectancy is rising.
- Chronological age is too inflexible as a unique criterion of
eligibility for a State Pension.
- NHS does not yet support this policy as there are big
differentials in health across the country.
- UK labour market is not prepared for this either due to
ageism.
- Encouraging more part-time work before full retirement could
alleviate State Pension cost pressures.
- Increasing the number of years of NI for full State Pension
could cut costs and recognise societal differences.
- Pension Credit rules should be relaxed too.
- State Pension policy is a political choice:
Here are the details:
- Anyone in their early-fifties and younger would be caught by
this proposal – plunging more into poverty in later life. The
rise in State Pension Age to 66 has already caused increased
poverty among 65 year-olds. Further rises, without offsetting
flexibilities, would cause more poverty for those without good
private pensions who are often in poorer health– see IFS report
here showing one in four 65-year olds in poverty. https://ifs.org.uk/news/latest-increase-state-pension-age-65-66-led-income-poverty-rates-among-65-year-olds-more
- Only the top 10% of the UK population stay healthy to their
early 70s. Therefore, social policy needs to recognise that the
majority of the population are not well by their mid-sixties –
ONS figures show the bottom 40% of men and women only stay
healthy on average to around age 61 or 62.https://www.ons.gov.uk/peoplepopulationandcommunity/healthandsocialcare/healthinequalities/bulletins/healthstatelifeexpectanciesbyindexofmultipledeprivationimd/2018to2020#healthy-life-expectancy-at-birth-by-the-english-index-of-multiple-deprivation
- Cutting costs by making unwell workers wait longer, favours
the well-pensioned higher paid. Disadvantaging more middle and
lower social groups, while benefitting well-pensioned higher
earners, is not the way to run an equitable social welfare
system. It would increasingly skew State Pension spending towards
better off, older people, who can afford to wait longer and tend
to live longer, while disadvantaging the majority.
- The State Pension is part of every worker’s social
contract. They and their employer have to pay significant
amounts of National Insurance, in order to insure themselves for
the basic minimum state pension support in future, once they
cannot work. That is the social deal. The State Pension is still
the bedrock of social support and chronological age is not a fair
determinant to use for cost-cutting decisions, due to significant
individual differences. It should be unconscionable to pull the
rug from under those who are least healthy and have very little
private pension as they get older, so they suddenly find they
must wait ever longer before they can receive even a penny of the
State Pension for which they paid National Insurance.
- Private pension coverage is still too uneven to support
increasing State Pension Age just because ‘average’ life
expectancy is rising. Despite Government spending over £70billion
a year on tax and NI reliefs for private pensions and
auto-enrolment, so far a great success in increasing coverage of
private workplace pensions, millions of people still have little
or no private pension. Those in their early-fifties or younger
will not necessarily have time to ensure a private pension can
bridge the gap between having to stop work and receiving state
pension income. Many would be forced to keep waiting longer to
start receiving their state pension, regardless of their health
or length of National insurance record.
- Chronological age is too inflexible as a unique criterion of
eligibility for a State Pension. Just raising the State Pension
starting age is a blunt cost-cutting tool that hits the poorest
and least healthy hardest, while the better off are relatively
unaffected – and if they are healthy and wealthy enough to wait
longer, can get an even higher state pension at older ages.
Policy must consider other ways to save money, which help ensure
greater fairness and flexibility for State Pensions. For example,
length of NI record or health conditions can be considered.
- NHS does not yet support this policy as there are big
differentials in health across the country. Until the Government
succeeds in improving NHS preventive health measures so the
service becomes one that focusses more on keeping people healthy
for longer, just continuing to increase the starting age for
state pensions will leave increasing numbers of sixty-somethings
at risk of being forced to work despite ill-health, or living on
the breadline.
- UK labour market is not prepared for this either due to
ageism. Government is trying to encourage and enable longer
working lives, but there is a long way to go. It must help
more employers to retain, retrain and recruit older workers, who
still face ageism in the workplace and are too often stereotyped
as being too old or about to retire, so they are ‘managed out’,
or overlooked for in-work training and ignored in recruitment.
While sixty-somethings still face discrimination in the
workplace, forcing them all to wait longer for their state
pension to start, leaves them at risk of unemployment
- Encouraging more part-time work before full retirement could
alleviate State Pension cost pressures. Chronological age does
not predict fitness to work. There are significant benefits to
working longer for some, but those too ill should not be left
languishing on out of work benefits, or forced to work full-time
to make ends meet. Longer working life can be a win-win for
individuals, society and the economy, boosting growth, incomes
and pensions. However, just considering the rise in average life
expectancy to decide state pension starting age is too brutal.
The social welfare system should recognise the differentials in
health and work ability between different groups. There needs to
be more flexibility for early pension payment to those who
genuinely cannot work.
- Increasing the number of years of NI for full State Pension
could cut costs and recognise societal differences. Only 35 years
of National Insurance are needed for a full State Pension. This
is certainly not a full working life in the 21st
century. Those starting work at 16 could have built up more than
50 years by their late-60s. The Government would reduce State
Pension costs by, for example, requiring 45 years for a full
state pension rather than just 35. This rewards those who have
paid in for more years and improves sustainability, social equity
and affordability – unlike just raising to 71.
- Pension Credit rules should be relaxed too. The starting age
for Pension Credit – which is the means-tested top-up for people
over State Pension age whose incomes are inadequate to avoid
poverty - has risen in line with State Pension age itself. Also,
the qualification criteria have been tightened, so that fewer
people qualify. At the very least, policymakers must consider
relaxing Pension Credit rules to allow means-tested support from
an earlier age. So far, the increases in State Pension age means
low income, least healthy sixty-somethings have been neglected by
policymakers and cannot even receive reduced ill-health payments
early. It is hardly a comfort to those who are too ill to work to
know they may get more when they reach the ever-rising age. Many
may not live that long, or will be pushed into poverty in the
meantime.
- State Pension policy is a political choice: With the
lowest state pension in the developed world, affordability is not
a deciding factor – the decision is about where to prioritise
spending. I believe older people deserve fairer retirement
support and the costs could come from other reforms, rather than
just taking away crucial welfare support from less well-off
groups.
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